See the 2nd pic - the original backplate is still there. I don't think you can actually remove it without seriously compromising the operation of the socket or integrity of the mobo. There's no need at all to remove it anyway - the Noctua backplate, and other backplates for aftermarket 1155/1156 coolers such as Thermalright etc., are specially shaped to fit over the stock backplate - see 1st pic.Anyway, the whole operation is stupidly easy and you just can't screw up

See the 2nd pic - the original backplate is still there. I don't think you can actually remove it without seriously compromising the operation of the socket or integrity of the mobo. There's no need at all to remove it anyway - the Noctua backplate, and other backplates for aftermarket 1155/1156 coolers such as Thermalright etc., are specially shaped to fit over the stock backplate - see 1st pic.Anyway, the whole operation is stupidly easy and you just can't screw up

thanks

Since I don't plan on upgrading my 775 to 1155 till Haswell at the earliest, if the Noctua backplate is no longer sold, what type of backplate do I need to locate and buy?

I guess any backplate that has mounting holes for 1156/1155 coolers (75 mm square) and is recessed to accommodate the native 1156/1155 socket backplate will be OK. That would be e.g. Thermalright Bolt Through Kit 1156 rev. B or Scythe Universal Retention Kit 3.

I guess any backplate that has mounting holes for 1156/1155 coolers (75 mm square) and is recessed to accommodate the native 1156/1155 socket backplate will be OK. That would be e.g. Thermalright Bolt Through Kit 1156 rev. B or Scythe Universal Retention Kit 3.

Hi kater, I just stumbled across this and I was in the same boat very recently!

I ran an original Ninja passively on my e4300 (I actually got it as a review model for a site I used to review HSs for). Couldn't find anything to compare with the Ninja's wide fin spacing bar that crazy Thermalright monster, but I just couldn't see an easy solution to mount the Ninja on S1155. I also prefer Gigabyte mobos because of their aggressive fan control when paired with an already low RPM Nexus RS. I also wanted to keep to a very tight budget for my i5 upgrade.

In the end I got hold of a second hand Noctua NH-U12 and I've been pretty happy with it. I'd have preferred the Ninja, definitely, but the Noctua lets me run the HS passively with only a top case fan on the P180 controlled by the Gigabyte mobo which keeps it @500rpm-ish pretty much all of the time, which is all I ask. When I fire up StarCraft II I have a rear 120mm Nexus RS that I just switch on (0V-12V fan controller).

I still have my Ninja. Can't quite bring myself to part with it It's still my avatar on several other forums.

We now know that IB (tick) will fit 1155 sockets, but Haswell is Intel's tock architecture and may very well have a new socket. So it may or may not be compatible with older coolers. However, please mind that it's not only the mounting holes spacing that you should consider, but also the socket's backplate. Still, the Noctua thingy is only about USD 10, so you may just as well buy it if you're so sure about your Haswell upgrade and see if it fits. If not, you can always sell it on Ebay to some crazy geek looking to do the Ninja / 1155 trick

We now know that IB (tick) will fit 1155 sockets, but Haswell is Intel's tock architecture and may very well have a new socket. So it may or may not be compatible with older coolers. However, please mind that it's not only the mounting holes spacing that you should consider, but also the socket's backplate. Still, the Noctua thingy is only about USD 10, so you may just as well buy it if you're so sure about your Haswell upgrade and see if it fits. If not, you can always sell it on Ebay to some crazy geek looking to do the Ninja / 1155 trick

Hey Kater, in 2013 when Haswell comes out (and if my pc has died) you could come out with a new thread on how to mount the SCN-1000 on a haswell!

the c2duo 975x ddr2 memory does everything I need. larger than 2tb though would be nice

All 1155 motherboards have standard sockets according to Intel specifications so yes, you can get any popular, regular ATX / mATX board and the Noctua backplate will fit.

But! Please be careful with 1155 ITX boards - due to very small size some of their components may be located on the underside of the board, close to where the socket's backplate is located, which could mean such parts will interfere with the backplate. I think I saw an example of such a problem here in the forums. Someone wanted to use a cooler with a backplate but couldn't, because of this little but protruding component.

All 1155 motherboards have standard sockets according to Intel specifications so yes, you can get any popular, regular ATX / mATX board and the Noctua backplate will fit.

But! Please be careful with 1155 ITX boards - due to very small size some of their components may be located on the underside of the board, close to where the socket's backplate is located, which could mean such parts will interfere with the backplate. I think I saw an example of such a problem here in the forums. Someone wanted to use a cooler with a backplate but couldn't, because of this little but protruding component.

My Core2 Duo/socket 775 board died 2 weeks ago so I upgraded to a i5-2500k/socket 1155 board and was hoping to reuse my Ninja, only to sadly discover that Scythe doesn't make an adapter kit for it. I'm trying to avoid buying another top of the line air cooler if possible.

Hi, Sorry to revive old post, but this got me inspired to adapt my Scythe Shuriken from its intended 755 compatibility, to 1155 use! All it involved was a pair of pliers and a steady grasp. Turns out the ~4mm needed (to take the 755 pin brace to the 1155 pin holes) can be achieved just by bending the brace clamps a little. Pics may clarify things a little.

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Just to confirm for anyone else who googles their way here, the Scythe Ninja Plus Rev. B works fine in the ASRock boards with dual 775/1155 mounting holes. I can't be the only one who's had it so long that they forgot it only has pushpins, not a backplate.

Yes it would have been great to keep my Ninja Rev.A - I have always been fond of it and it will always hold a special place with me as the perfect heatsink for its time and something of an icon. If I could have ported it to my new system easily I would have, but now I'm running the Noctua and still run a completely passive system, except when I play StarCraft II and turn normally inactive Nexus up to 11 (1,000RPM).

Also, for me is was an early (and free!) review sample I received. As I worked for quite a high-profile hardware review site at the time when I reviewed it and all the praise I heaped on it and subsequently the amount I recommended it across various forums, I'd like to think I was responsible for one or two sales

I still have the Ninja in a drawer somewhere... because of that place it holds in my heart - as a reviewer, PC silencer and hardware enthusiast - I don't think I'll ever sell it.

I have a Ninja sat beside me i'm looking to use with a new 1155 board(Gigabyte Z77 D3H) arriving later in the week.

I have a question for kater if he's still around, or if anyone else can answer just to clarify please that would also be great.

If i'm following katers directions correctly all i need from the Noctua Mounting Kit is the backplate, correct? Are the screws used in the directions from the motherboard or from the ninja? I'm not entirely sure on which screws kater used to fit the backing plate through the motherboard to the hacked/modded mounts.

We already PMd with t31os, but just to clarify here - I used the bolts that came with the Ninja, same as I would with the Ninja's backplate. My grandpa cooler is still fine, not going anywhere and will be probably cooling my next build, whenever that is.

Yes, yet another backplate from Scythe but it doesn't seem to have lasted long. The latest Scythe CPU cooler, the Ashura, uses an Intel 775/1155/1366 backplate with separate AMD and Intel 2011 fittings. The Ashura is clearly a Noctua NH-U14S competitor and from my local supplier somewhat cheaper, around 75% of the cost of the U14S.

since a backplate is just sheet metal, wouldn't it be possible if Noctua backplate owners simply scan a picture, offer size in mm, and thickness in mm, and we can go to a sheet metal shop and create our own?

i wonder how much a noctua backplate costs vs cost of a new heat pipe cooler that is haswell socket compatible.

Although Haswell uses a different CPU socket (LGA1150) the cooler fixing holes are at exactly the same spacing as the previous 1155 and 1156 standards. So any 1155/1156 cooler or backplate should work. Noctua sell their Haswell/1155/1156 backplate and fixings as a separate kit, NM-i115x. In the UK this only costs around £5 ($8 US).

danAs to the losing of the magic stuff inside heatpipes - well, I guess we will be very well able to verify if Ninja, or similar ancient cooler, can still work all right after 10 years. Mine dates back to early 2006, so gimme some more time and I'll report back. I'm sure SPCR could also produce a meaningful re-test. Given my lack of time and need to constantly meddle with the PC and upgrade it at whim, I'm pretty sure I'll be running my current setup in 2015/16.

Who knows, perhaps tiny portions may somehow penetrate the heatpipes, or it may simply start losing its properties, but so far I haven't seen any deterioration in performance. Wonder what HP producers have to say on the lifespan of the pipes.

danAs to the losing of the magic stuff inside heatpipes - well, I guess we will be very well able to verify if Ninja, or similar ancient cooler, can still work all right after 10 years. Mine dates back to early 2006, so gimme some more time and I'll report back. I'm sure SPCR could also produce a meaningful re-test. Given my lack of time and need to constantly meddle with the PC and upgrade it at whim, I'm pretty sure I'll be running my current setup in 2015/16.

Who knows, perhaps tiny portions may somehow penetrate the heatpipes, or it may simply start losing its properties, but so far I haven't seen any deterioration in performance. Wonder what HP producers have to say on the lifespan of the pipes.

Ninja FTW

yeah have you heard of g5 cooling leaking? a lot of older 80s era computer cases are rusted

danAs to the losing of the magic stuff inside heatpipes - well, I guess we will be very well able to verify if Ninja, or similar ancient cooler, can still work all right after 10 years. Mine dates back to early 2006, so gimme some more time and I'll report back. I'm sure SPCR could also produce a meaningful re-test. Given my lack of time and need to constantly meddle with the PC and upgrade it at whim, I'm pretty sure I'll be running my current setup in 2015/16.

Who knows, perhaps tiny portions may somehow penetrate the heatpipes, or it may simply start losing its properties, but so far I haven't seen any deterioration in performance. Wonder what HP producers have to say on the lifespan of the pipes.

Ninja FTW

I, somewhat sadly, sold my Ninja review sample on to someone on another forum. I actually still have a picture of the Ninja as my Avatar on that forum... It was just sitting in my drawer doing nothing that they were looking for a low-noise cooler for their HTPC build so I offered up the Ninja. He reported the temps back to me Q8200 and the temps were pretty good from the cooling config he described.

He just used the stock thermal compound that came with the Ninja too, which is obviously just as old as the Ninja. I'd used AS5 from the get-go and he didn't have any so he just used the original, unopened stuff.

Take the push-pin mounting plate for the Rev B, and remove the push-pins. You'll notice that the holes where the pushpins went in are sort of oval- they're almost wide enough to use as-is, but not quite. This guy, right here-

Now the trick. See the dog-leg bend in each tab on the bracket? Straighten it out. I used a bench vise, and pinched em flat. You could probably do it with a hammer on the sidewalk too, if you're desperate This makes the tabs a bit longer, and ends up being the perfect length for the 1155 mounting holes.

I have an opportunity to get the full copper ninja for 30 dollars to adapt it to 1150 would be another 10 that is still half the price of the noctua cooler I was going to use and the copper ninja is rly sexy lookin. I'm gonna try and talk to guy down to 25 for it since i have to buy the kit.

Will this kit work Noctua NM-i115x Mounting Kit? Any response would be well appreciated. Has anyone tried it out? It's an updated version of the previously mentioned noctua kit that worked very well.

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